best a sizable percentage of the employee population that felt sympathetic to the group that stormed the capitol and said it was no different than the black lives matter of last summer. some lament that the only reason this activity is getting more attention is because of quote, political correctness. this e-mail went on to flag a number of incredibly alarming examples of comments being made in different fbi field offices including one official saying this. quote, over 70% of his counterterrorism squad and roughly 75% of agent population in his office disagreed with the violence, but could understand where the frustration was coming from which led to the protestors getting carried away. the fbi declined to comment on the e-mail when it became public last week then the fbi agents association told nbc news that it does not comment on ongoing investigations. added this, quote, fbi agents understand the importance of separating their own personal views from their professional wor
trump lawyer jim trusty described the battle over whether the documents were kept as comparable to a dispute over to an overdue lie b. the judge indicating if she appoints a special master, she may still allow the intelligence community to review the seized documents as part of a damage assessment. prosecutors, meantime, arguing the special master was unnecessary and saying trump s team has offered no evidence there was any disregard for the former president s rights. as the judge asks, what s the harm in appointing a special master. beyond the courtroom, trump it s not like this was some sinister plot. reporter: insisting whatever happened at mar-a-lago was the result of hastily packing up to leave the white house. you accumulate a lot of stuff over a term and all of a sudden you re leaving and stuff gets packed up and sent. reporter: trump s team down played the documents found in his home and club, without denying they were classified. saying, simply put, the n
closer to understanding why the government felt it had to do this as opposed to waiting and going back and forth yet again with the former administration. but let s be clear here. this also could not move in all honesty the needle all that much for you out there in the public because there s a reason these things are often kept under wraps and has a lot to do with protecting the rights of the person whose home or in this case, estate, are being searched, and of course the safety of witnesses and sources. the judge said as much when he cleared the way for fbi agents to execute that warrant and saying in his written order, quote, the government has met its burden to show compelling, reason, good cause to seal portions of the affidavit because disclosure would reveal, one, identities of witnesses, law enforcement agents and uncharged parties, two, the direction, strategy, sources, scope, and methods. and three, grand jury methods protected by criminal rules of procedure. as for
People. Our laws that protect National Defense information are critical to the safety and the security of the United States. And they must be enforced. Violations of those laws put our country at risk. In the indictment itself, we learned some of the documents contained u. S. Nuclear secrets. And while we have not seen any of those documents, for obvious reasons, there is new reporting from multiple outlets that donald trump cavalierly shared Nuclear Secrets with a foreigner one evening at maralago, allegedly. Nbc news hasnt confirmed the reporting, but the New York Times cite two sources familiar who say shortly after he left Office Former President Donald Trump shared apparently Classified Information about American Nuclear submarines with an australian businessman. And that during the the conversation, the former president revealed how many Nuclear War Heads the subs carry and how close they can get to a russian sub without being detected. Sources familiar who say the australian bus
now there s a new attorney joining george zimmerman s case. about time. that s kind of interesting. he did have a representative at first buchlt now the two of them will jointly represent george zimmerman. his father also really sat down to talk about his son s version of events the night that trayvon martin was shot and killed. here is what he said. he was walking back to his vehicle. trayvon came from his left side, asked him, did he have did he have a problem? george said no. at that point, trayvon said, well, you do now. he punched him in the nose, knocked him to the concrete and started beating him. george was there, yelling for help for at least 40 seconds. it s clearly him on the tape. joining us this morning, lou palumbo, nassau county police officer and director i have trouble talking, one minute, 30 seconds into the show. nice to have you. we ve spent a lot of time now talking about this particular case. we re now getting the version of events fleshd out